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English

traverse

/tɹəˈvɜːs/ · noun

Meaning

  1. A route used in mountaineering, specifically rock climbing, in which the descent occurs by a different route than the ascent.
  2. A series of points, with angles and distances measured between, traveled around a subject, usually for use as "control" i.e. angular reference system for later surveying work.
  3. A screen or partition.
  4. Something that thwarts or obstructs.
  5. A gallery or loft of communication from side to side of a church or other large building.
  6. A formal denial of some matter of fact alleged by the opposite party in any stage of the pleadings. The technical words introducing a traverse are absque hoc ("without this", i.e. without what follows).
  7. To travel across, often under difficult conditions.
  8. To visit all parts of; to explore thoroughly.
  9. To lay in a cross direction; to cross.
  10. (artillery) To rotate a gun around a vertical axis to bear upon a military target.
  11. , To climb or descend a steep hill at a wide angle (relative to the slope).
  12. To (make a cutting, an incline) across the gradients of a sloped face at safe rate.
  13. Lying across; being in a direction across something else.
  14. Athwart; across; crosswise

Etymology / origin

No prose etymology has been added yet.

No ancestor words have been linked yet.

Related words

Descendant words

No descendant words have been linked yet.

Sources

  1. DictionaryAPI.dev English dictionary data
traverse — meaning and etymology | WikiWord